70 ",. i .,. ).. Jj' . ,\ "", . \\\ '^4. \, : '< - /..ø \ .. , !t. .,...... " \ .:, > ),. " ø-' ' . ", r ' -- j , , " . . < , -;. t 1 : .\ . \ : ... j w,*" "'u :. "W> \ Carnival stripes from Morton Myles Colors as fresh and brIght as call iope- notes for a dress fluttery soft and gentle. With delicate shoulder tucking above a tied dolman sleeve l and a waist neatly wrapped with matching stripes In crayon colors on white rayon crepe de Chine; for sizes 6 to 12 $130. Fifth Avenue Collections. ".. m '; "- .,.",' \ II; ,I; , ;. '. '" , ,\ I ' \ " '\ <!, ' . . t- v ,,\ "< \ , \ "\ \ \ ,: , \ \,; \t, " ,of ,,;. -.. <<' ' -.w ' 4 Ñ / 611 Fdth A venue New York and all stores Add 1 25 for hahdlmg mati and phone orders beyond our regular dellverv arpas. !:-'" ....... - .=- . .cX.: "* ..,. ... .q.....; .... ........."." :1 ' '<. l ;#"'^' , N i À ".. "\ , 4. . . <' . 0- .. $ ...... ., .. ,.. '? .. "".. Y, : .... -r {j>. A Gift of Love In folklore, the strawberry is a plant of Venus At Steuben, it is a pendant trapping tiny air bubbles as seeds, within hand-formed clear crystal. Capped by a calyx of 18 karat gold, it hangs from a 14 karat gold chain The uStrawberry Pendant" was designed by Donald Pollard and Earl Stampp. $525. We accept American Express Diners Club International Master Charge, VI SA. -iH4\( i STEUBEN CLASS Fifth Avenue at 56th Street New York N.Y. 10022 · (212) 752-1441 in "Through the Looking-glass," the search for life on Mars was fraught with certainties and rules that seemed to change from one moment to the next-a situation that HorowItz fell victim to more precipitousJy than any- one else. His first-peak result-the one that had nothing to do with the pres- ence or absence of life-was a count of several thousand per minute, and some such high count had been pre- dicted, since it was expected to reflect the radioactive carbon gases adsorbed by the soil and then released by the heating. Indeed, neither the press nor most of the biology team would nor- mally pay much attention to Horowitz' first peaks, other than to note that the machine was evidently working prop- erly. But the second-peak result, which came a few days after the first peak and was to indicate whether or not metabolic activity was going on, got a great deal of attention, for its count was ninety-six-a sign of significant activity. (Activity was officially defined as any count above fifteen. Actually, the minimum active count was not fif- teen at all but one-tenth of that, 1.5; Horowitz and his associates had raised the official active co un t, thus increasing tenfold the margin against the sort of error they feared most.) "I was in- credulous," Horowitz said when he was asked whether he thought it strange that, with his relatively pessimistic view of life on Mars, he was the one whose instrument gave what appeared to be the most unambiguous indication of life "You could have knocked me over with one of those Martian cobbles" He couldn't claim, as Oyama and Klein did of Levin's results, that oxi- dants were mimicking life, because since he had used no water, oxidants should have no effect on the experi- ment. Like Oyama, he had been forced to reverse his position-but in the op- posite direction, for Oyama, who had been the most optimistic about life on Mars, was the one who had found the strongest evidence against it. Many more reversals followed in the search for life on Mars. Though Horowitz' count was more than six times as great as the official negative (and sixty-four times as great as the unofficial one), ninety-six was not in itself a large count, considering that a reasonably lively terrestrial soIl had given Horowitz a second peak in the thousands, and even a sample of soil from the most inhospitable sort of place on earth-a dry Antarctic valley-pro- duced a reading of a hundred and six. Because the surface of Mars is drier and colder than the driest and coldest